US-S.Korea military drills to resume amid thaw with Pyongyang
The United States and South Korea
announced Tuesday that their annual joint military drills will go ahead next
month, but the main exercise will be shortened by a month as a diplomatic thaw
with North Korea gathers pace.
No aircraft carrier will take part in
the large-scale exercises that involve tens of thousands of troops and which
are a perennial source of tension between the two Koreas, with Pyongyang
condemning them as provocative rehearsals for an invasion of the North.
With talks under way to set up a
North-South summit, followed by a proposed face-to-face meet between Donald
Trump and Kim Jong Un, there was speculation that this year's drills might be
scaled back to avoid derailing the discussions.
A Seoul defense ministry spokesman
Tuesday confirmed the main exercise, expected to resume on April 1, would be
truncated.
"The Foal Eagle exercises will be
held for a month in April due to a delay caused by the Olympics and as each
military has its own schedule," the spokesman told AFP.
Last year the drills were conducted for
two months through March to April. This year's exercises had already been
delayed to avoid clashing with the Pyeongchang Winter Games in the South last
month.
The news came despite official
statements Tuesday from both Washington and Seoul that this year's drills would
be "similar" in size to previous ones.
"The UN Command has notified today
the North Korean military on the schedule as well as the defensive nature of
the annual exercises," Seoul's defense ministry spokeswoman told
reporters.
The Pentagon added in a statement:
"Our combined exercises are defense-oriented and there is no reason for
North Korea to view them as a provocation."
"Foal Eagle" is a series of
field training exercises with approximately 11,500 US service personnel taking
part, together with 290,000 South Korean troops, while "Key Resolve"
is a tabletop exercise using mainly computer-based simulations.
According to a senior South Korean
envoy who made a rare visit to Pyongyang earlier this month, Kim had made it
clear he "understands" the need for the drills to go ahead.
Such an acknowledgement is in stark
contrast to the Kim regime's denunciations of the exercises in the past. The
North has often responded to the drills with its own military actions, and last
year fired four ballistic missiles close to Japan.
- 'Low-key' drills -
A spokesman at the US-South Korea
Combined Forces Command (CFC) told AFP: "At this moment, there is no plan
to deploy a US aircraft carrier and other strategic weapons" during Foal
Eagle.
"I think both the South and the US
are staging a relatively low-key exercise in a bid not to unnecessarily provoke
the North in this mood of rapprochement," Kim Yong-hyun, a professor of
North Korean studies at Dongguk University.
Kim also noted the North's relatively
quiet posture so far ahead of the drills -- unlike in the past when its army
and state media issued a storm of angry denunciations before and during the
exercises.
"It's really important not only to
the North but also the US and the South to put the situation under control
during the drills," he said.
"I think all sides will try to
spend the next few weeks as smoothly and quietly as possible."
The US, as South Korea's security
guarantor, has close to 30,000 troops stationed in the South -- a legacy of the
1950-53 Korean War that ended with an armistice instead of a peace treaty.
Following an extended period of
escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula, last month's Winter Olympics
provided the catalyst for a sudden and very rapid rapprochement that resulted
in the announcements of the planned summits.
Those announcements were made by the
South Koreans, who have been orchestrating the diplomatic preparations and
acting as the messenger between Washington and Pyongyang.
Trump's administration is pushing ahead
with plans for a summit before the end of May, but North Korea has yet to
independently confirm it even extended an invitation to leadership talks --
maintaining a silence that has raised some concerns in Washington and Seoul.
According to the South Korean envoy who
met with Kim in Pyongyang, the North Korean leader also offered to consider
abandoning his nuclear weapons in exchange for US security guarantees, and
flagged a halt to all missile and nuclear tests while dialogue was under way.
Kim Byung-yeon, an expert in North
Korea's economy at Seoul National University, said the ever-growing layer of
sanctions on the North was pushing its regime to negotiations.
"With the economic damage caused by
the sanctions growing ... the North seems to have come forward for talks to
curb potential frustration among its people," he said.
"I think the North will show more
sincerity in upcoming negotiations than before."
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